Fans of phablets should rejoice as Samsung has finally unveiled its new Galaxy Note 3 at a pre-IFA 2013 press conference. Built around a 5.7-inch Super AMOLED screen and powered by either Samsung's own Exynos 5 Octa or Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800, the new Galaxy Note 3 is certainly a shining star in the phablet market.

The main part of the Galaxy Note 3 is its 5.7-inch Super AMOLED 1920x1080p screen that takes up most of the 151.2x79.2x8.3mm dimensions. It also features support for the new S Pen. It weighs 168 grams and it features 3GB of RAM, which is more than any current smartphone or phablet on the market and will ship in 32GB and 64GB storage options expandable by up to 64GB microSD card.

The main rear 13-megapixel camera is transplanted from the Galaxy S4. The rest of the specs include LTE support, 802.11ac WiFi, GPS/GLONASS, Bluetooth 4.0, MHL 2.0 port, IR LED for remote control and NFC as well as 3200mAh battery that, according to Samsung, provides 40 percent more video playback than the previous Note.

It runs on Android 4.3 with Samsung's own Nature UX overlay and comes with a new S Pen stylus that gives it "additional functionality". The new S Pen features are called Smart Freedom and it launches a circle with five actions including Action Memo, Scrapbook, Screen Write, S Finder, Pen Window when you press a button on it as well as some other neat features.

The new Galaxy Note 3 phablet will launch on September 25th in more than 140 countries worldwide. Unfortunately, Samsung did not shed any light on the actual price of the new Galaxy Note 3.

Samsung might have accidentally revealed a new, yet unannounced, product that should be announced during Mobile World Congress 2012 in Barcelona, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1.

Theverge.com noticed the name Galaxy Note 10.1 next to the original 5.3-inch Galaxy Note as well as couple of other Bada phones. The name of the device suggests a product similar to the Galaxy Tab but with support for Samsung's inductive sylus called the S Pen.

Samsung's S Pen made a lot of sense on the Galaxy Note and Samsung certainly tried a lot to advertise the Galaxy Note as the device that is neither a smartphone nor a full sized tablet device. The bigger tablet device with S Pen would make sense as Samsung did note before that S Pen could be used for different screen sizes.

The device also showed up in a casting call for Samsung commercial marketing the device as one used for education, financial planning and art. In any case, we'll know for sure once Mobile World Congress kicks of later this month.